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Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Home & Student Edition

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 Location:  Home » Software » Office Suites » Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Home & Student EditionOctober 6, 2008  
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Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Home & Student Edition
Microsoft Office 2008 for Mac Home & Student Edition

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From: Microsoft Software
Category: Software

List Price: $149.95
Buy New: $114.50
You Save: $35.45 (24%)



New (42) Used (4) from $92.98

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 239 reviews
Sales Rank: 2

Format: Dvd-rom
Platforms: Macintosh, Mac Os X
Media: DVD-ROM
Edition: Home & Student
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.3 x 1.4

MPN: GZA00006
Model: GZA00006
UPC: 882224526302
EAN: 0882224526302
ASIN: B000X86ZAS

Release Date: January 15, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 41-45 of 239
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4 out of 5 stars Some Old, Some New   July 28, 2008
Nice way to transition from using Windows to using a Mac. I miss some of the features from the 2002 Windows version.


2 out of 5 stars A step backward from Office 2004, and has bugs.   July 28, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Both Word 2008, and especially Excel 2008 definitely run slower than the 2004 editions for opening, page scrolling/screen updating, and saving files. Saving even a small Word document takes at least 3 seconds. For some large (3MB) Excel spreadsheets opening takes 50 seconds and scrolling is annoyingly slow. Even opening the Data > Sort menu can take 10 seconds. Its bad enough that I've removed both Word and Excel 2008 and gone back to the 2004 versions. Entourage 2008 works fine, and I've kept on it as my primary email client.

Perhaps Microsoft should offer the option of not installing, turning off or de-installing many of the new supplementary functions in Office 2008 to optimize speed, (e.g. SmartArt, WordArt, Elements Gallery, Ledger sheets, Automator, Publication templates, Ligatures in fonts, Custom Lists, etc., etc.)

Some features in Office 2008 are a definite step backward from Office 2004:

* Dragging image files from the Desktop into a Word 2008 document can not be done like it could in Word 2004. This was a very convenient feature in previous versions of Word.

* In Office 2008 the Open Recent file list is on a second-tier menu within the File menu. I now have to go File menu > Open Recent (stop my pointer exactly on the little triangle line) before a second menu pops out with the recently opened files. If I jiggle my pointer off the line the menu disappears and I have to start over again. This is bothersome and time consuming. It was better in Office 2004 when the recent document list was visible at the bottom of the File menu. I could simply pull down and let go on the file name - one menu instead of two, and a bigger target to land on, hence faster and easier. The good news is that they now allow a maximum 99 recently used files in this list.

* To insert Header/Footer items like Filename, Date, Page X of Y you must now do View > Header/Footer, then open a second pull down menu: Insert > Auto Text > Header/Footer > Filename, and you need to go through this secondary menu hierarchy for each Header/Footer entry. Very time consuming and frustrating. Please bring back the control panel in that was in Word 2004 for View > Header/Footer which allowed you to insert items like Filename, Date, Page X of Y, etc. all at once and from one place.

* In Word and Excel 2008 the Preferences window requires an extra click on a Show All button to back out of a preferences category. It was better in Office 2004 where all the preference categories can be selected from buttons beside the window so that you can quickly switch between preferences categories.

Some glitches I've noticed:

* The preferences in Excel seem to set themselves back to the default settings from time to time. I have to go back into Preferences and reset them all.

* The frequently used fonts list at the top of the font pull down menu keeps losing my most frequently used fonts.

* There is an Elements Gallery bar of buttons (e.g. SmartGraphics, WordArt, etc.) above the top ruler which mystically appears in some, but not all, Excel & Word 2008 documents. These are rarely-used features, and they take up screen space. I've looked everywhere but I can't find any way to remove this button bar from the top of documents.

I'm using Office 2008 Home+Student (updated with Service Pack 1 & 12.1.1) on a 12" G4 PowerPC, 1.33 GHz, 1.25 GB RAM, 28 GB free hard drive space, and no other applications running while using Office 2008. I have repaired permissions and restarted the computer, yet these issues persist.



4 out of 5 stars Easy to Use, Expansive Product Suite   July 24, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Office 2008 is much what it is advertised to be: it is fast, flashy, and overflowing with ways to get your work done. From installation (which is more like a windows installation) you can pick and choose which products to install - I don't use Entourage, so this review ignores that product - it was very simple to exclude from the installation.
It's hard to escape MS Office these days, and though Apple Pages can save documents in Office readable formats it is a process at every save that you must go through - this isn't a Pages review, but I have used the Apple productivity suites, and I must say I prefer Office 2008 and not just for compatibility issues.
Don't be fooled, there are some problems with Office 2008 - the graphics are very nice and there are numerous views to organize and create Word documents in - the cost is that these graphics do not always work correctly. Problems occur especially when multiple windows are open, and Office reacts strangely to OSX Spaces - the main Word window will shift spaces when cycling through programs, and the toolbox has a strange way of dispersing itself across the Spaces - press f8 to bring up all open spaces and you can quickly locate the fragments of the toolbox and by dragging them, reassemble it - a simple fix that can become time consuming (say if you like using the internet and iTunes in different spaces) and it's something that shouldn't have to be fixed in the first place. In Word the cursor has a way of disappearing after switching Spaces and if it becomes visible again, well lucky you.
Despite these flaws there have been some significant improvements. These are of course similar to those witnessed in Office 2007 for PCs - bright graphics which replicate the menus of yesterday for doing such things as changing the style of your paper, adding word art, charts or virtually anything else you may want to do. These are again replicated in the toolbox - giving users at least three ways of accomplishing the same tasks (menus remain largely intact).
These changes make for a more customizable workspace, and much quicker access to various different functions of Office 2008's various programs. Things that even an experienced user may have once passed over are obvious and easily inserted quickly and without fuss (hyperlinks in Power Point are extremely easy, and provide thumbnails of slides for easily linking slides together). It doesn't just look good, it truly is useful - what really is simply a cosmetic change, is surprisingly helpful.

So - in conclusion Office 2008 works faster, is reliable (never had a crash, always opened documents, works great with other versions of the programs - older versions still open and edit 2008 saved documents), is visually appealing and quickly provides its entire expansive list of features for users. Unfortunately it is completely ignorant of Spaces, and as such may become more of a headache than a blessing for anyone that uses spaces (pretty much at all - changing spaces leads to erratic behavior - writing this review I changed a song in iTunes and literally lost the Word window!).
I would recommend buying Office 2008 - it has a lot of features, it is easy to use and can create some very nice looking documents and presentations. If the spaces get annoying, and you don't use or need all of the features then try Apple's Pages and Front Page - it has a lot to offer, but not quite as many features.



2 out of 5 stars Not a good dollar value.   July 22, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

The primary reason a lot of people buy Office is simply to be compatible with other Office users, but this version _isn't_ very compatible. MS omitted VBA from all the 2008 Mac editions, and the home edition further lacks Exchange Server support (making Entourage pretty much pointless), and the data analysis pack for Excel.

Backward compatibility is not terrific either, and no I'm not talking about the switch to OOXML file formats. I have a number of "legacy" files and templates that were originally created with Office 2000 and XP on Windows. They open fine in Office:mac 2004 and Office 2003 for Windows. The even open with iWork and OpenOffice. They do _not_ open properly with Office 2008 or 2007. (This won't be a surprise to longtime Office users. Swapping files between old and new versions has never been completely painless.)

So with compatibility with other Office users all but removed from the equation, it seems to me there's little reason not to use one of the cheaper, or even free, alternatives to Office. Apple's own iWork is really slick, and costs about half what the Office home edition does. NeoOffice and OpenOffice will keep even power users happy, and they're _free_. By comparison, MS Office is sluggish in operation, and doesn't bring enough to the table to justify its high price.



4 out of 5 stars Office 2008 for Mac   July 22, 2008
I have been using Office 2004 for Mac for the past few years. I decided to switch to Office 2008 due to compatibility reasons with Vista. 2008 is very similar to 2004, although it does offer some more advanced features. In terms of using applications, most applications have the same or a very similar layout. Although I don't think it is completely necessary to upgrade, I would recommend Office 2008 for Mac anytime. If you are interested in purchasing 2008, I believe there is a video on apple.com that explains all of the new features.

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